I want to mention that one of the things we've been studying about COVID is the fact that what makes it particularly unique is that as people are responding, whether they are health care, emergency services or military members, they are also going through it at exactly the same time, unlike going into a humanitarian situation where you're going into a post-hurricane, and you weren't living through the hurricane. These members were and still are living with COVID. They're worried about their kids. They're worried about their families. They might have gone to school in the neighbourhood. As Lieutenant Colonel Bailey said, they know these neighbourhoods; they know these communities.
The fact that they too are responding to COVID and are worried about their own families and their own grandparents makes it doubly difficult. It's something that we're really trying to understand, because we've done the best we can to support people in this situation but as you said, this is very new.
It's the same with researchers. Researchers normally research something that they're not directly involved in. COVID's a different story, so it's a really complicated time, and we will be studying this for decades, and we will be living with the impact of this for a hundred years.
Thank you for that really important question.